Our site uses cookies to improve your experience. You can find out more about our use of cookies in About Cookies, including instructions on how to turn off cookies if you wish to do so. By continuing to browse this site you agree to us using cookies as described in About Cookies.

Abstract

In May 2001, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) declared the Zápara language part of the world's “intangible cultural heritage.” This article examines Ecuadorian government celebrations and press coverage of the UNESCO award. It demonstrates how both employed discourses of loss and preservation that included the Zápara within the Ecuadorian nation, while simultaneously marginalizing them as cultural and political others. This case study suggests that discourses of loss have as much potential to reinforce existing hegemonies and power relations as they do to undermine them. As such, it indicates the need for anthropologists and activists to more closely scrutinize widely circulating discourses of loss and revitalization to understand how such discourses can be enabled by, work through, and reinforce colonialist narratives as much as they contest them.

If you can't find a tool you're looking for, please click the link at the top of the page to "Go to old article view". Alternatively, view our Knowledge Base articles for additional help. Your feedback is important to us, so please let us know if you have comments or ideas for improvement.